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  5. The Archaeology of Industrial Activity on Secular Sites in Early Medieval Ireland, AD 400-1100. Site Gazetteer H-Z (see A-G for author details)
 
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The Archaeology of Industrial Activity on Secular Sites in Early Medieval Ireland, AD 400-1100. Site Gazetteer H-Z (see A-G for author details)

Author(s)
Kerr, Thomas  
Doyle, Maureen  
Seaver, Matthew  
McCormick, Finbar  
O'Sullivan, Aidan  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/10938
Date Issued
2012-12-31
Date Available
2019-07-22T09:55:46Z
Abstract
EMAP Report 6.1 deals with the archaeological evidence for industrial activity on secular sites in early medieval Ireland. It is comprised of four main sections. The first section provides a general overview of the creation of the report, including general distribution maps and histograms. The archaeological evidence for industrial activity is covered in fuller detail in sections two and three. Section 2, prepared by Matt Seaver, examines the evidence in greater depth for specific industrial activity, namely iron-working, non-ferrous metal-working, glass- working, and antler/bone-working. This is accompanied by comprehensive tables outlining the site evidence for the major industrial activities. Section 3, prepared by Maureen Doyle, looks at the production of items of personal ornamentation and decoration. Rather than adopting a single-material approach, this section examines the production of different types of artefact. Thus ‘pins’ are discussed together, whether they were made of bone, antler, bronze or iron, since they performed a similar function. The final section consists of a site gazetteer of industrial activity in early medieval Ireland. This includes over 300 secular sites, and contains substantial tables outlining the evidence for craft activity, as well as the types of artefacts recovered from the site. Much of the evidence for industrial activity in the gazetteer is derived from reports which have not been fully published, i.e. the large body of ‘grey literature’ that has emerged during the last two decades.

The investigation of industrial activity shows that certain early medieval secular site-types produced more evidence than others. It also suggests that there was a hierarchy of industrial activity, with perceived high status sites producing more prestigious materials – such as non- ferrous metals or glass. There is also a suggestion of a degree of regional patterning, most clearly indicated by the distribution of shale-working sites, but also possibly influential in the location of iron-working sites. The findings indicate that secular sites played a substantial role in early medieval craft and industry, a fact that is often overlooked due to a focus on the production-levels of ‘monastic towns’, and latterly, Hiberno-Norse settlements.
Other Sponsorship
Heritage Council INSTAR programme
Type of Material
Technical Report
Publisher
Early Medieval Archaeology Project (EMAP), UCD School of Archaeology and School of Geography Archaeology and Palaeoecology, Queens University Belfast
Subjects

Archaeological eviden...

Industrial activity

Secular sites

Medieval Ireland

Language
English
Status of Item
Not peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
File(s)
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Name

EMAP2012 EarlyMed_Industry_Gazetteer H-Z.pdf

Size

26.17 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

6bc44e60ae18418ba6f0386dec87700f

Owning collection
Archaeology Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
All other content is subject to copyright.

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